What's in a Name? Let's Try "Paranormalogy!"

By Rev. Sherrie James

Whenever I tell most people that I am involved in the paranormal, unless
they are paranormal television fans or paranormal investigators, they have a
tendency to believe that I am somehow involved in the occult. They
understand "paranormal" to mean a main dish of "scary, evil, devil stuff"
with side dishes of "ghosts," "demons," and "seances." Dessert is "all the
stuff of which bad dreams are made" with a topping of whipped "stupid." For
many of the uneducated, that is a general understanding of the word,
"paranormal."

It is like Groceries

I try to explain to people that using the word, paranormal, is more
like saying, groceries as opposed to occult. Groceries are
made up of various food categories that are further broken down into
packaged products. Then groceries are broken down still further into
individual brands or items with their distinctive flavors and
characteristics.

Like groceries, the word paranormal is a broad, encompassing term that
includes various main categories, such as parapsychology, ghost hunting,
entities, spirituality, and metaphysical studies. Those categories are
broken down into styles, brands, cohorts, or venues of action, such
telepathy, paranormal websites, negative hauntings, teams, paranormal
electronics, religious rituals, and yes, even the occult. These then get
broken down still further into even more individual elements, such as EVP
recordings, exorcisms, team promotions, camera choices, and experimental
techniques. Just like with groceries, the person gets to spend his or her
money and pick and choose which one he or she wants to take home and/or
metaphorically ingest.

Sometimes people outside the paranormal community do get "paranormal" when I
explain it to them like that. Just as often, people will give me a forced,
indulgent smile or sometimes a condescending frown. Many individuals still
regularly warn me that I should not be messing with such things, especially
as a minister. (I usually just bite my tongue but I always want to ask them,
"So you think Jesus should not have been messing with demons either?")

Paranormalogy

Frustrated with this communication problem between what we are doing
actually in the paranormal and what people have in their minds that we are
doing, I decided that maybe we in the paranormal community need to adjust
our terminology. Maybe we need to refer to what we are engaging in as
something more mainstream and less negatively loaded. Maybe we should classy
it up a bit and make what we are doing more official and more acceptable
sounding. After all, as Mr. Shakespeare wrote, "What is in a name? That
which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet."

Taking Willie's advice, I have begun to tell people recently that I am
involved in paranormalogy. When pressed as to what that means, I
explain that my definition for paranormalogy is "the scientific study of all
things beyond what is typically considered to be normal or natural and that
have yet to be fully understood or scientifically explained or proven." (I
thought that definition sounded kind of cool!)

When pressed further, I explain that I study the biological, metaphysical
and spiritual unknown aspects of humanity and our universe through
scientific and occasionally advent guard, experimental means. (Now, that is
probably one of the fanciest ways that you will ever hear anyone say that he
or she is a ghost hunter! But hey, "A rose by...")

The subjectively charged "paranormal" loses its negative connotation as it
becomes the parent root word for our more formal, scientifically-sounding
discipline: paranormalogy. I am probably not the only person to ever
consider calling what we do paranormalogy, but now I am one of the biggest
advocates for its usage to describe that which we in the paranormal
community are involved to those outside of our community. And why stop
there?

Citizen Science

As opposed to just calling ourselves ghost hunters or paranormal
investigators, we also can claim to be
citizen scientists
(regular people without degrees in a particular subject but who are involved
in its study using scientific means) in the field of paranormalogy. We can
explain that we often do the same things that scientifically-minded
individuals have been doing for years, decades and millennium. We
experiment. We guess. We try new things. We try to figure out what works. We
document and share our findings. And then, we do it all again with new
environmental variables! [Editor's note: Citizen Science is a growing field
of lay enthusiasts who do exactly that, from environmental observation like
bird watching to more sophisticated projects.]

("As a hobby, I am a citizen scientist in the emerging field of
paranormalogy," probably sounds so much more socially acceptable and
appealing to grandma or your boss as opposed to saying, "As a hobby, I hunt
ghosts.")

As citizen scientists, we engage in semi-scientific-to-totally-scientific
methodologies as we attempt to understand the phenomenon of ghosts and
whatever is truly going bump in the night. The main difference from the past
is that we now are more open and rigorous in our intentional explorations as
opposed to being closeted Dr. Frankensteins. Our lay scientific community is
expanding daily, which makes paranormalogy probably the fastest growing
science on the planet, with the ever-improving odds for its eventual success
and acknowledgement based upon the sheer numbers of those involved.

As the citizen scientists of paranormalogy, we set out regularly into our
version of the unexplored wilderness, not with tents, sleeping bags and
compasses, but with meters, cameras and recorders. (Well, actually,
sometimes we do bring tents, sleeping bags and experiment with compasses.)
But like those who have blazed trails before us, we also go forward to
explore the unknown with a mix of excitement, fear, and a need to record and
map where we have been for ourselves and for future generations. Our bravery
against the norm, our new methodologies, our subjective theories, and our
new scientific toys will be the building blocks of our legacy and the
frontier history of our emerging science.

Science, unfortunately, has a tendency to destroy creativity and spontaneity
due to its stringent requirements for the reproducibility of results. That
necessity for recreation is used as one of the primary standards in
determining the validity and accuracy of scientific inquiry. The very nature
of what we are studying, the paranormal, with its unknown variables,
however, often precludes the ability to reproduce results.

Paranormalogy, by the very nature of what is being studied, dictates
innovative thinking and the establishment of new norms for a unique science.
We must not allow paranormalogy to be frozen out because it cannot play well
yet with the big kids of science using the same rules of their game. In this
new science, because of its very nature, it means that "once" may be all
that is ever possible. We may never be able to reproduce an event or a
successful experiment. (Some of us believe that ghosts/unknown entities have
rights and have the freedom of choice to cooperate or not.)

Challenges

Caution must be exercised as our new science of paranormalogy evolves. If
paranormalogy becomes too mainstream scientific too soon, this actually may
destroy or stifle the unprecedented and creative advances being made
possible by its less constrained citizen scientists. Attempting to discover
the unknown demands creativity, new experiments, and taking investigate
risks. Citizen scientists must be allowed the freedom to exist, to be
creative, and to fail.

Our fledgling science must never forget its roots. The inclusion of its
citizen scientists in their varying stages of understanding, education and
knowledge about the paranormal are essential in order for paranormalogy to
succeed and to flourish in its early stages. Sadly, it will become easy for
lay scientists to be forced out in the future as advances are made and
paranormalogy becomes a more recognized science.

In the years to come, people probably will have to become certified in
paranormalogy or have at least a bachelor's degree in paranormalogy in order
to be taken seriously. (Sadly, some people are claiming that all ghost
hunters should be certified even today as opposed to simply being educated
about having respect for all involved and about safety protocols.) The roots
of paranormalogy research - from the ancient Egyptian priests to two
plumbers with a television show to the paranormalogy lay scientists - will
eventually become the quaint stories told of our science's beginnings.

With all of these considerations in mind, and as the founding fathers and
mothers of this new science, we still boldly go forward into the emerging
field of paranormalogy. The final frontier is not space. (Apologies to all
the trekkies!) By whatever name we choose to call our rose, the final
frontier will always be the metaphysical, the spiritual, the unexplained,
the possibility and complexity of life after life, and the challenges of
understanding the existence of the human soul... which hopefully
paranormalogy scientists actually will prove exists at some point in our
near future.

The Rev. Sherrie James works in the paranormal and religious communities to
help bridge the gap between religion and the paranormal. She writes and she
speaks at conferences and on the radio to help educate about the spiritual and
ethical aspects of paranormalogy and about negative hauntings. As part of her
ministry, Rev. Sherrie acts as a paranormal crisis intervention specialist, and
occasionally as an exorcist, as she assists clients and their families who are
experiencing especially challenging or negative haunts. For more information,
please go to her
website, or write to her at revsherrie@gmail.com.